Financial Security in Later Life

 

     
 

What are Common Later Life Financial Goals?

Marlene S. Stum, Ph.D. Family Social Science

Knowing what it is you are trying to accomplish makes planning and decision making easier. Decisions about long term care are no exception. It is extremely helpful for elders and their family members to have identified their later life financial goals, determined which goals are most important, and shared where they agree and/or disagree. Knowing your goals can then help guide which long term care financing options make the most sense for your situation. Too often families are operating on "automatic pilot" without having defined their goals.

Do you know what financial goals are common in later life families? There are six financial goals family members commonly identify as potentially important in later life:

  • Self-sufficiency
  • Spouse's financial security
  • Control
  • Leaving an inheritance
  • Qualifying for public assistance
  • Privacy

Keep in mind that different perceptions of goals are normal and to be expected among family members and across the generations. The meaning of goals as well as which are most important are likely to differ among family members (between spouses, adult children and parents, and adult siblings). It is important for each family member to identify their own financial goals and then determine where they agree or disagree with others involved in making financial decisions.

 

 

Department of
Family Social Science

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